When I bestride him, I soar,
I am a hawk;
he trots the air;
the earth sings when he touches it...
He is pure air and fire
(Henry V, Act III, Scene 7)
(Henry V, Act III, Scene 7)
If any one image is associated in the popular mind with the Middle Ages then it is the knight in shining armor on a (usually) white horse.
Nor
is the image entirely misleading. Throughout the age of chivalry, the
mounted knight dominated both the battlefield and popular culture. Yet, as I
will explain, it was not the warhorse (destrier) alone that made the horse the
true hero of the Middle Ages.
A 13th-century encyclopedia of animals written by
the Dominican scholar and bishop Albertus Magnus lists four kinds of horses:
warhorses (destriers), riding horses (palfreys), racehorses, and workhorses. Of
these, riding horses and racehorses can be said to vary little from the horses
of today, at least in terms of function, with the caveat that "riding
horses" of the Middle Ages had to travel long distances in often difficult
terrain and all weathers. Their role in medieval society and economy were not
exceptional, however, being the same as it had been for thousands of years
before and hundreds yet to come. Warhorses and draft horses, on the other hand,
were fundamental in shaping medieval society in unique ways.
Starting
with the more obvious, a knight could not fulfill his military function
without a warhorse. From Hastings to Bannockburn, the charge of heavy
cavalry (knights) was the dominant offensive tactic of the age. Although
a cavalry charge could rarely lift a siege and never secure a castle,
when enemies confronted one another across a battlefield, knights
clashed on horseback. Furthermore, a well-timed, well-led charge was
almost invincible.
In
order to be able to deliver such a knock-out blow, however, knights
trained for years to master horsemanship, mounted combat, and fighting
in teams/units. So did their horses.
Not
every horse could cope with the noise, the sudden movements, the flash
of sunlight on metal, the blows, the crush of horses, and the smell of
blood. Not every horse had the strength or stamina to carry an armored
knight for hours, or the agility to respond to sudden changes of
direction, the need to spin about or sidestep. This meant that warhorses
had to be carefully selected -- and trained. Ultimately, man and horse
had to respond as one being if they were to be an effective fighting
machine with a chance of survival.
It
was to train for mounted combat -- particularly in small units as teams
-- that tournaments developed. Historian Andrea Hopkins in her
excellent work Knights [London: Collins & Brown, 1990] notes: “it
is hardly possible to overestimate the importance of the tournament to
the culture of medieval knights.” She notes that in addition to being “a
crucial training ground in which young knights could practice the
handling of their horses and weapons, tactics of attack and defence, and
of co-ordinating their actions with a team of companions," the
tournament also:
...provided an arena for the display of all important knightly virtues: prouesse in combat, courtoisie to the watching and judging ladies, largesse to crowds of minstrels, heralds, armourers, squires and other assorted hangers on, and qualities such as the franchise and debonairete with which a knight should conduct himself in triumph and disaster (the qualities which later developed into the European gentleman's sense of fair play), and the pite which he should exercise to his defeated opponents. (p. 108)
Indeed,
over the centuries, tournaments were transformed from training events
very similar to genuine combat into sporting and social events quite
divorced from the reality of war. By the 16th and 17th century they were
little more than pageants -- but that was after the end of the Middle
Ages. In the High Middle Ages, they retained their value as training
while also providing entertainment.
In
the world of the tournament, a knight's destrier was not only a tool of
war in training with him but a part of his persona. Like his armor, his
coat of arms, and his crest, his horse formed a component part of his
image and identity. A beautiful horse made a good impression on the
ladies, but an exceptionally responsive, fast or determined horse might
make the difference between victory and defeat. The death or injury to a
good mount, on the other hand, could destroy a knight's prospects --
and his financial position as well because warhorses were extremely
expensive.
It
was a measure of just how important good warhorses were that a knight
forfeit his destrier along with his armor in a tournament defeat.
Successful tournament champions could opt to retain a captured mount --
or sell it back to the owner at a handsome fee. (Or, if inclined, show
pity and largess by restoring it without charge or for only a nominal
fee.) Likewise, inadequate reserves of good warhorses could have an
impact on the outcome of battles. One can only imagine what might have
happened at Jaffa, for example, if Richard the Lionheart had disembarked
with his warhorses!
While
the warhorse was not a specific breed as we know today, it was the
product of centuries of horse breeding in the Early Middle Ages that had
systematically produced larger horses than those of previous centuries
and other regions, i.e. the horses of the Greeks and Romans or
contemporary Mongols and the Arabs. Significantly, medieval horses were
strong enough to carry a fully armored knight, but that does not mean
that they were similar to draft horses in other ways.
Furthermore, what defined them was not size and strength alone, but rather temperament and character. For a start, in order to keep them aggressive and spirited, they were not castrated. Albertus Magnus further claims: "It is a
trait of these [war]horses to delight in musical sounds, to be excited
by the sounds of arms, and to gather together with other chargers. They
also leap and burst into battle lines by biting and striking with their
hooves." (On Animals: A Medieval Summa Zoologica,
translated by Kenneth F. Kitchell Jr. and Irven Michael Resnick
[Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1999])
Shakespeare captured
this aspect of warhorse character in the opening of Henry V, Act IV,
when he writes: "Steed threatens steed, in high and boastful neighs."
It
is hardly surprising given how much time a knight spent training with
his destrier -- and how dependent he was on the horse for his success
and survival -- that strong bonds often developed between a knight and
his charger. There is one recorded incident of a horse defending his
unseated knight during judicial combat, preventing the opposing knight
from delivering the coup de grace by repeatedly imposing his equine body between the human combatants.
Albertus Magnus also writes: "They
sometimes care so much about their masters and grooms that, if [the
latter] are killed, they grow sad and pine away, even to the point of
death." The grief of knights for a good horse was also recorded in
various texts. The images below of knights sleeping beside their grazing
horses seem a lovely tribute to this close and trustful relationship.
Yet
it was arguably the medieval workhorse that made the greater
contribution to medieval society. The evolution of larger, stronger
horses was critical to the agricultural revolution that greatly
increased production and improved the nutritional intake of the common
people dramatically. The stronger horses and tack designed to harness
them to advanced plows enabled medieval peasants to not only scratch the
soil but to turn it over, turning up more nutrients. The horses were
faster too, plowing roughly twice as much in a day as the alternative
draft animal, oxen -- much less human drawn plows.
With more land under cultivation and greater productivity per acre, peasants could afford to leave one-third of their land fallow -- rotating crops and leaving land fallow to regenerate every third year. This further increased productivity and so diet as well. It has been argued that this agricultural revolution enabled human beings to reach their full genetic potential for size and strength for the first time in human history. Certainly, it resulted in human beings who were on average taller and stronger than people in other parts of the world in the same period.
With more land under cultivation and greater productivity per acre, peasants could afford to leave one-third of their land fallow -- rotating crops and leaving land fallow to regenerate every third year. This further increased productivity and so diet as well. It has been argued that this agricultural revolution enabled human beings to reach their full genetic potential for size and strength for the first time in human history. Certainly, it resulted in human beings who were on average taller and stronger than people in other parts of the world in the same period.
Nor
was it the plow horse alone who made such a dramatic contribution to the
medieval economy. More powerful draft horses could also be employed in
transport. The ability to transport heavy materials such as timber and
stone was crucial to construction and ship-building. The more powerful
draft horses could also be used to transport other commodities and
finished products in larger quantities, thereby contributing to commerce
and overall economic growth particularly inland, away from the
waterways that had been the lifelines in the past. Unfortunately, the
mundane, if essential work, of transport horses rarely captured the
imagination or attention of medieval artists. The best I can do is a
medieval "carriage."
Last
but not least, draft horses also played a role in war, transporting
heavy siege equipment, baggage and the wounded. The ability to
transport heavy equipment was cited by crusade historian John France as
one of the West's significant advantages vis-a-vis their Saracen
opponents.
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Dr. Helena P. Schrader holds a PhD in History.
She is the Chief Editor of the Real Crusades History Blog.
She is an award-winning novelist and author of numerous books both fiction and non-fiction. Her three-part biography of Balian d'Ibelin won a total of 14 literary accolades. Her current series describes the civil war in Outremer between Emperor Frederick and the barons led by John d'Ibelin the Lord of Beirut. Dr. Schrader is also working on a non-fiction book describing the crusader kingdoms. You can find out more at: http://crusaderkingdoms.com
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